MAKING A SOLAR-CELL TESTER WITH MECRISP-STELLARIS FORTH

In the last two articles on Forth, I’ve ranted about how it’s stunning but strange, and then gotten you set up on a basic system and blinked some LEDs. and while I’ve pointed you at the multitasker, we haven’t made much real use of it yet. getting started on a Forth system like this is about half the battle. working inside the microcontroller is different from compiling for the microcontroller, and figuring out the workflow, how to technique problems, and where the beneficial resources are isn’t necessarily obvious. Plus, there’s some terrific features of Mecrisp-Stellaris Forth that you might not notice until you’ve hacked on the system for a while.

Ideally, you’d peek over the carry of someone doing their thing, and you’d see some of how they work. That’s the goal of this piece. If you’ve already flashed in our version of Mecrisp-Stellaris-plus-Embello, you’re ready to follow along. If not, go back and do your homework real quick. We’ll still be here when you’re done. A lot of this post will be very certain to the Mecrisp-Stellaris flavor of Forth, but given that it runs on tons of ARM chips out there, this isn’t a bad place to be.

Getting Acclimatized

The first thing you’re going to need to get used to in Forth is the stack. You know that old chestnut about people only being able to keep five (seven?) things in their mind at one time? Forth puts that to the test.

Last time, I briefly pointed out the .s (“print stack”) command. In the Hackaday Edition, I’ve re-defined the conventional Mecrisp .s to be a little bit less verbose, and to my eyes a lot more readable. If you find yourself hitting .s a lot, and you will, I’ve also written a function that (temporarily) overwrites the “ok.” prompt by appending a stack printout to it, whenever you hit enter. type print.stack and hit enter one a lot more time to see how it works. hitting the reset button, or typing reset will wipe everything in RAM, and that includes the stack-printing prompt, so you’ll be back to a clean slate.

Now is probably a good time to play around with the stack operators. have you read the Mecrisp glossary? check out the list of stack juggling operations there. turn on print.stack and play around until they all make sense.

Have you run words yet? It spits out a linked list of every word that Forth knows, along with the memory locations where they live, and some extra details — too much detail, unless you’re debugging the system itself. There’s an extra, nonstandard, word in Mecrisp that just prints out the function names: list. give that a shot now. If you haven’t already defined a few words, do so.

: hw .” hello, world!” cr ;
is a good one to have on hand.

Layers in Memory

Mecrisp-Stellaris’ memory is divided into two gross locations: RAM and flash. All words that are provided before the “— Mecrisp-Stellaris Core —” mark are in RAM, and will be lost on reset or power-down. new RAM functions will be appended to the front of the list.

After the “— Mecrisp-Stellaris Core —” mark come functions in flash. In the early parts of flash, before “— Flash Dictionary —” is the conventional Mecrisp Forth core. From there until “<>” are words taken from the Mecrisp distribution that are normally useful, including some debugging functions and multitasking. preceding “<>” are the contributions from the Embello libraries, including a lot of GPIO definitions, and those before “<>” were added just for this post series.

What’s not evident is that all of these markers with brackets surrounding them are cornerstones. These allow you clear out flash up until that memory location. So if you’ve added some extra functions into flash, and want to clear back out to the Hackaday edition default state, you can type <>. The extra functions will be erased, and the chip reset. (Note that this loses whatever was in RAM!) The command eraseflash will get you back to the “— Flash Dictionary —” marker.

Overwriting History

If you define a word twice with the same name, you’ll have two versions of the word in the dictionary. When a word is called or compiled, the interpreter looks through memory, from the top of RAM down, and then from the end of flash back to the beginning. Words with the same name in RAM thus get called before those in flash. What can be particularly odd about Forth is that, because it compiles in real-time, the word that is referred to in any calling word is the one that was on the top at the time the calling word was defined. Making tangled histories is a sure way to go insane.

: foo .” foo!” ;
: bar foo .” bar!” ;
bar foo! rúd! rendben.
: foo .” bizzle!” ; Redefine foo. rendben.
foo bizzle! rendben.
bar foo! rúd! rendben.

On the other hand, here’s a great way to work that takes advantage of these various memory features. RAM gets erased on every reset, giving you a clean slate, but by using cornerstones, flash isn’t immutable either. Of course, the deeper in flash you have to erase,the a lot more words you have to redefine later, assuming that some of them were useful. This suggests a layered technique to development, with the most “core” words innermost in flash. That’s also natural because words need to be defined to be called, so defining the basics first makes sense anyway.

You can compile a new word to RAM (the default) by calling compiletoram or to flash by invoking compiletoflash. Prototype your words in RAM. feel complimentary to overwrite them as lots of times as you want, but remember that you have to redefine any dependent words after you change something upstream to keep the calling history intact. once you’re made with a chunk of development, type reset and clear RAM. now redefine these words into flash. If you develop your application from the bottom up, you’ll find that this all hangs together nicely. When you’ve discovered a bug in something that’s already written to flash, the cornerstones come to the rescue.

Finally, this layered nature of Forth definitions can be really handy. For example, a function init that’s defined in flash gets run on each reset. It includes things like setting the processor speed and the system tick, that you probably don’t want to mess with. because you can overwrite init, and any compilation uses the words available at the time of compilation, you can simply layer your functionality onto init: : init init .” howdy!” cr ;. The first “init” is the name of the new word, and the second is calling the pre-existing init, and doing all of the setup. The remainder of the definition is yours to play with. On restart, everything will get carried out in the buy it was defined.

Creature Comforts

I write a lot of code in an editor (Vim) and then send it over to the chip to play around with. very specifically, I wrote a script called forth_upload.sh that contains the following:

[[ $1 ]] && TERM=$1 || TERM=/dev/ttyUSB0
DELAY=0.2
while read -r f; do echo “$f” ; echo “$f” > $TERM ; sleep ${DELAY}s ; Kész

To send a file to the serial port, and thus to Forth, forth_upload.sh < myfunctions.fs will work. It loops through each line in the file, allowing a 0.2 second delay for the system to compile anything. This delay is too long, in my experience, but the bugs from having it short are lousy to find. Folie takes the technique of trying to find the “ok.” prompt to speed things up, but this has issues of its own. If you’re using Vim, you can send individual words or a full file with the following: nnoremap u vip:silent w !forth_upload.sh
inoremap u :silent .w !forth_upload.sh
nnoremap U :silent w !forth_upload.sh

This setup lets me develop and tweak functions in an editor that I like, and then send them nearly quickly into the Forth system to test out. I keep a terminal window open that’s always logged into the Forth system, so I can enjoy the new words get defined in, and then start playing around with them interactively. It’s pretty sweet.

The Solar Cell Tester

Now to a quick real example that will make use of all of the above. I recently made a decision to characterize a bunch of small solar panels that I had in my junk drawer. This indicates adjusting the load on the panel and noting down the voltage generated by the panel and the current through the load. I hooked up two multimeters and wrote down some numbers, but this is undoubtedly a job for a microcontroller.

As is clear from the image, this is a quick lashup. The larger chunk of copper-clad has a current-measurement resistor and a pair of resistors configured as a voltage divider to step down the panel voltage to something the 3.3 V ADC can handle.

Dangling off that is the (silvered) variable load circuit, which is entirely sub-optimal: a MOSFET dissipates the heat by being turned half on by a PWM’ed voltage fiiltered by that 100 uF capacitor. The 9 V battery and optoisolator were cobbled on to make sure a high enough voltage to fully open the MOSFET, which wanted a lot more than 3.3 V. This horrible, but functional, load circuit was a later addition — the first version just had a potentiometer here, until that got smoked by running too much current through it.

The pushbuttons are used to start and stop recordings from the device out on the balcony without having to run back inside. The procedure was to alligator-clip in a new panel, and hold the white button while it made recordings. The small black button is pressed once to demarcate a new cell’s data. The data goes back to my laptop over UART serial through an ESP8266 running esp-link as a transparent WiFi serial bridge, seen in the upper left, ideal next to the recycled laptop batteries. hot glue and cardboard round out the state-of-the-art build.

To the Datasheet!

This kind of quick and hands-on tool-building is where Forth shines. The Jeelabs Forth libraries already have some functions that simplify the ADC setup, but they actually didn’t work for me, so I looked to the datasheet.The bare minimum that one needs to get the ADC working is to turn on the ADC peripheral clocks, enable the ADC unit, and then select the ADC sampling time. We might also want to run the ADC calibration procedure to make sure our readings are correct. This is all the sort of low-level detail that you’d have to make with any microcontroller — or lean on a library that does it for you.

Reading the datasheet, to turn on the ADC system clock, we need to set the ADC1EN bit in the RCC-APB2ENR memory register. Tök mindegy. Mecrisp-Stellaris has some support code that reads these values from files that are supplied by the manufacturer. I’ve included them in the core/registers/ directory. The memory map file had great mnemonics for all of the registers, but I’m not thrilled with the way that the individual bit names are handled. That’s a yak to shave on another day, I’m trying to get stuff done.

Here’s the set of bit-level ADC words that I came up with:

\ Hookup
\ PB0 – AIN8 is connected to panel voltage
\ PB1 – AIN9 is connected to current sense resistor

: adc.rcc-enable 9 bit RCC-APB2ENR bis! ; \ set ADC1EN
: adc.set-adon 0 bit ADC1-CR2 bis! ; \ set ADON to enable ADC
: adc.set-cal-bit 2 bit ADC1-CR2 bis! ;

: adc.cal-done? 2 bit ADC1-CR2 bit@ 0= ;
: adc.isdone? 1 bit ADC1-SR bit@ ;

9 bit creates a number with the ninth bit set and all others zero, and RCC-APB2ENR bis! sets the desired bit in the relevant ADC control register. all in all, pretty opaque, but also one-for-one with the datasheet’s instructions. good naming of these bottom-layer words makes things a little better one layer up. For instance, the word that is responsible for running a calibration (set one bit, wait until another is clear) is relatively readable: : adc.cal adc.set-cal-bit begin adc.cal-done? amíg ;.

And here we see our first flow control, the begin…until construct. The buy is strange, right? begin starts the loop, The test function adc-cal-done? executes, leaving a true or false value on the stack, and then until reads this value and loops back to begin until the value is true. This is the same as a C while (!adc-cal-done()){;} busy-wait loop. and it’s an introduction to another Forth idiom: using ? for anything that returns a Boolean.

Test, Fix, and test Again

So let’s test these words out. Initializing the ADC and reading it are easy: now let’s take them for a run and make sure that the values are what we’re expecting. Whipping up a quick test fixture in Forth is one of its main strengths. : test-adc begin adc@ . cr 10 ms key? amíg ; defines a word that reads the ADC, prints the value, and repeats every ten milliseconds until you hit enter. If you do this with a solar panel under a fluorescent light, for instance, you’ll pick up the mains frequency ripples as they hit your panel, which is something you might not have been thinking about. The ability to play around with your new words as soon as you define them makes this sort of investigative coding flow naturally.

True story time. When I was writing this code, I had set a too-short sample time on the ADC inputs. This causes the value from one reading to affect the next because the ADC’s internal capacitor doesn’t have time to charge or discharge fully. I was getting too-high readings for the current when the voltage was high, and too-low readings for current when voltage was low. I debugged this fairly swiftly by writing a routine that read each channel a few times in a row and printed the values out, and I left those words in for posterity.

( Take 8 samples of each, for debugging )
: read-both 8 0 do read-V . loop 8 0 do read-I . loop ;
: readloop begin read-both cr 100 ms key? amíg ;

Feedback from this testing exercise lead me to switch up the sample times on the ADC to their maximum value, because nothing here was time vital and I was using a fairly high-impedance source. (The default is to sample as swiftly as p

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